Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 83South Africa
Gasa v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd (D12786/2018) [2024] ZAKZDHC 83 (14 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
14 June 2024
Judgment
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## Gasa v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd (D12786/2018) [2024] ZAKZDHC 83 (14 June 2024)
Gasa v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd (D12786/2018) [2024] ZAKZDHC 83 (14 June 2024)
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sino date 14 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D12786/2018
In
the matter between:
SIZAKELE
ANGEL GASA
PLAINTIFF
and
SHOPRITE
CHECKERS (PTY)
LTD
DEFENDANT
ORDER
The
following order is issued:
1.
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
HENRIQUES
ADJP
Introduction
[1]
This trial concerned what is colloquially referred to as a ‘slip
and fall’
case which arose from an incident that occurred on 28
December 2015 at the Checkers Hyper, Pavilion Shopping Centre,
Westville
at around 13h00 in the vicinity of the till points. At all
relevant times, the plaintiff was in the company of her husband and
their four children, one of whom was four months old and whom she was
carrying on her hip.
[2]
At the commencement of the trial, the parties agreed to a separation
in terms of Rule
33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court in which the
aspect of negligence was to be determined separately from that of
quantum.
Issues
[3]
The core issues that the court was required to determine were:
(a)
what was the reason for the plaintiff's fall;
(b)
whether the defendant's negligence contributed to the plaintiff’s
fall; and/or
(c)
whether the plaintiff was contributory negligent, which negligence
contributed to
the fall.
Pleadings
[4]
In paragraphs 7 and 8 of the particulars of claim the plaintiff sets
out the grounds
of negligence relied on in relation to the defendant
and/or its servants acting in the course and scope of their
employment. She
specifically avers that the defendant was negligent
in that it and its servants:
‘
(a)
Failed to ensure that the floor of the shop was clear of spillages;
(b)
Failed to adequately monitor the floor of the shop to ensure that any
spillages on the floor
were mopped up so as not to cause a danger to
shoppers;
(c)
Failed to put up warning signs to shoppers that there may be
spillages on the floor
of the shop;
(d)
Failed to warn shoppers and the Plaintiff that there was spillage on
the floor;
(e)
Failed to cordon-off the area where there was spillage until it had
been wiped;
(f)
Failed to take reasonable steps to prevent harm to the customers
whilst, by the exercise
of reasonable care, they could and should
have done so.’
[5]
Both parties called a single witness. Although the plaintiff intended
to call her
husband to corroborate her evidence, this was not
possible as it transpired that throughout the course of her evidence,
her husband
was seated in court.
Mr Veerasamy
, who appeared
for the plaintiff, correctly acknowledged that it would accordingly
be inappropriate for him to call the plaintiff's
husband to testify.
Exhibits
[6]
During the course of the proceedings seven exhibits were handed in
being photographs
depicting where the incident had occurred inside
the Checkers Hyper store as well as correspondence exchanged between
the plaintiff,
her former attorneys of record N Hedder Attorneys, and
her current attorneys of record, and the defendant.
The
evidence
[7]
The plaintiff, a safety officer testified that on 28 December 2015,
she and her family
had proceeded to the Checkers Hyper store,
Pavilion to purchase chips and cool drinks. She confirmed that they
had identified items
for purchasing and her husband and three
children stood in the queue at the tills waiting to pay.
[8]
Whilst standing in the queue, she remembered that she had forgotten
to take chips
off the shelf and then proceeded with her
four-month-old daughter on her hip to the aisle walking away from the
till area to fetch
the chips. When they had initially walked to the
tills and joined the queue she did not observe any spillage on the
floor. As she
departed from the till area and walked to the aisle to
fetch the chips she once again did not notice any spillage on the
floor.
[9]
She conceded that this was a very busy time in the retail calendar,
being Christmas,
and many people bustling around inside the store. As
she walked away from the aisle having retrieved the items, towards
the till
area to re-join her family, she slipped on something and
fell on her back. She recalls blacking out and when she regained
consciousness
turned to the left whilst lying on her back and
observed her four-month-old baby daughter, a distance away. The baby
was lying
face down on the floor and not moving or making a sound.
[10]
Because the spillage on the floor was slippery enough she manoeuvred
herself whilst on her back
to get closer to her daughter, picked her
up, and cradled her on her chest. It was at this point that her
husband came to her and
helped her stand up.She recollects being
taken to an office by security where she was subsequently attended to
by paramedics. She
confirmed that a photograph had been taken
immediately after the incident which was handed in as an exhibit that
depicts the area
where the liquid had fallen. The blue liquid was
subsequently identified as Sta-Soft by her husband. She was unaware
if any warning
signs were present in the area where she fell.
[11]
During cross-examination, she acknowledged that there were lots of
people around her and she
did not observe any spillage on the floor.
She could not recollect how much time she had spent in the store
before falling. In
addition, the plaintiff testified she had no
independent recollection of how she fell or that the spillage
constituted Sta-Soft.
Much of what she was informed of as to how the
incident occurred and what she testified to was what she had been
told by her husband.
[12]
She acknowledged that as one walks away from the aisles towards the
till area she would be able
to see in front of her and would have
been able to observe the spillage on the floor and acknowledged that
she did not see it.
She also did not notice anything strange about
the behaviour of the people in front of her as she proceeded from the
aisle to the
till area which could alert her to a possible spillage.
[13]
Although she could not estimate how long it took, she was certain
that it did not take her a
long time to proceed from the aisle to the
till when the incident occurred. When she and her husband and
children walked towards
the till for the first time she could clearly
see what was in front of her. This was also evident from the
photographs. In addition,
she could see the floor clearly in the
photo in the area where the spillage is depicted save for the fact
that on the day in question,
there were many people around. She
acknowledged that she did not see the spillage on the floor given the
fact that there was a
lot of movement around her and also as she was
looking around.
[14]
During cross-examination, she also acknowledged that on 7 January
2015, she had dispatched a
letter to the defendant's store manager
the contents of which did not accord with her evidence in court. She
confirmed that she
had provided instructions to her attorneys in the
presence of her husband. The letter that she had dispatched to the
defendant
was written by both herself and her husband as her husband
was explaining to her what had transpired.
[15]
She acknowledged that there were discrepancies between her evidence
in court and what is disclosed
in the letter as after the incident
she had blacked out and there were many things that she could not
remember which her husband
assisted her with. Her husband was the one
who ‘filled in the blanks’ and told her what had
transpired in relation
to what she could not remember because of the
blackout.
[16]
The plaintiff confirmed that she had no independent recollection of
seeing the blue spillage
on the floor nor was she aware that it was
Sta-Soft. It was her husband who informed her after the incident that
the substance
was Sta-Soft as he could smell it on her clothing. She
agreed that she had no independent recollection of seeing the
Sta-Soft or
smelling it and did not know what she slipped on.
[17]
She understood and appreciated that stores like the defendant must
take all steps to keep the
store reasonably safe. She had no
knowledge of the number of cleaners or staff employed by the
defendant on the day in question.
The plaintiff additionally
indicated that she could not comment on the suggestion that if she
slipped on the spillage at all, the
probabilities were that the
spillage occurred a short time before she slipped on it given her
evidence as to what she had done
immediately prior to falling.
[18]
The area she walked past on her version, she agreed, provided her
with three opportunities to
observe the spillage on the floor. She
confirmed that the store was very busy and there was a lot of
movement of people and it
was impossible for her to see what was on
the floor. The plaintiff agreed with the suggestion of the defendant,
that it was not
possible for every spillage to be detected
immediately. She declined to comment on the suggestion that the
employment of eight
cleaners by the defendant who were assisted by
staff to monitor the floor area was reasonable. She also declined to
comment that
it was not possible to have a cleaner walk behind every
shopper in the store. That then was the evidence for the plaintiff.
[19]
Raakesh Clive Dudhraj (Dudhraj) testified that in 2014/2015
specifically on 28 December 2015
he was the store manager at the
Checkers Hyper, Pavilion Shopping Centre. He was present on the day
of the incident although he
did not actually witness it. A staff
member and a security guard informed him of the plaintiff’s
fall and the spillage. On
hearing of this, he immediately went to the
area where the incident had occurred. The staff were already present
there with the
cleaners and security and were cleaning the spillage
on the floor.
[20]
He confirmed that December is an extremely busy period in the retail
calendar and it is among
one of the busiest in the year next to
Easter. During normal working hours the store receives approximately
6000 to 8000 customers
per day and for the month of December
approximately 193 000. During his two-year period as a store manager,
there were not many
incidents which had occurred.
[21]
Based on the nature of their business they were aware that spillages
might occur and they did
not want the public and shoppers to get
injured in the store and were intent on providing a safe shopping
environment. To this
end, the store employed a third party
specialised cleaning company which at the time placed six cleaners at
the store. The cleaning
company had a site supervisor at the store
and they as management and the staff at the store also monitored the
floor for spillages.
[22]
In December and Easter, because it is a high volume trading time,
they normally have eight cleaners
instead of the six cleaners. There
were between 34 to 35 aisles in the store at the time and
approximately 5200m² of trading
space. They have a full staff
complement of 348 people with between 120 to 150 staff present for
the day and 80 staff members being
present on the floor at any given
time.
[23]
On his arrival at the store in the morning, the controller informs
management, being himself,
and five others of the arrival of the
cleaning staff. At approximately 6:00 am when he opens the store he
ensures that everyone
has arrived for work. Part of his functions are
to check on the store and the cleaners. No disciplinary proceedings
were instituted
against staff members including himself, arising from
the incident.
[24]
In addition to the cleaners, the 60 to 80 staff members keep an eye
on the floor, and that way
they keep spillage incidents to a minimum.
As soon as the spillage occurs it is attended to immediately. A crate
or basket is used
to cordon the area off and the cleaners are
notified immediately. If a spillage occurs, their internal policy is
that it has to
be cleared up immediately or within five minutes of
the spillage being detected. Either he or a staff member stands by
and cordons
off the area until it has been cleaned.
[25]
The system that they employed worked well as there were no incidents
reported. He confirmed that
he did not have a conversation with the
plaintiff after the incident and indicated that although the
plaintiff testified the spillage
was on the floor no one warned her
and it was undetected, given the time of year in question, it was
unlikely that it was not detected
and attended to immediately.
[26]
He confirmed that he did not have a copy of the contract concluded
between the cleaning company
and the defendant as the contract was
terminated by the head office approximately five years prior to him
testifying and no records
were kept. The photographs which depict the
store is the present configuration of the store and does not depict
the store configuration
in December 2015. During cross-examination he
conceded that he did not have any knowledge of the spill event before
he got to the
plaintiff and by the time of his arrival, the cleaning
staff had already cleared the spillage and he could not tell when the
spill
had occurred. This concluded the evidence presented.
Analysis
[27]
The plaintiff’s claim is based on delict and she alleges that
the cause of her fall was
as a result of the spillage on the
defendant’s shop floor. The defendant owed her a duty to ensure
that the floor of the
shop was reasonably safe and was negligent in
that it had failed to warn shoppers of the presence of the spillage,
failed to monitor
the floor of the shop, and detect the presence of
the spillage and failed to remove the spillage from the floor.
[28]
The defendant admits that the plaintiff had fallen but indicates:
(a)
it took all reasonable steps to ensure the plaintiff’s and
other shoppers safety by
keeping the floors clean, it employed an
independent cleaning contractor to inspect the floor at reasonable
intervals so that a
spill could be detected in less than 5 minutes;
(b)
that at that time of the year it had approximately 80 staff present
on the floor of the
store to assist cleaning staff to inspect and
monitor the floor and notify them of spillages;
(c)
the plaintiff had traversed the area where the spillage occurred on
more than one
occasion and it was on the third occasion that she had
fallen. This is indicative of the fact that the spillage occurred
shortly
before she fell.
[29]
In
MTO
Forestry (Pty) Ltd v Swart N.O.
[1]
the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) set out the elements of a delictual
action which the plaintiff must establish to succeed in her
claim
being (1) the conduct of the defendant of which it complains, (2) the
wrongfulness of the conduct, (3) fault on the part
of the defendant
(in this case in the form of negligence), (4) that she has suffered
harm and (5) a causal connection between such
harm and the
defendant’s conduct that is the subject of the complaint.
[30]
In
Probst
v Pick ‘n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
[2]
,Stegmann
J referred to the English law, relying on a decision by Lord Goddard
CJ in
Turner
v Arding & Hobbs Ltd
[3]
which addressed the duties owed by a shopkeeper. Concerning the
manner in which the onus was to be discharged, the learned judge
quoted the following:
‘
Assistants cannot
be expected to walk behind each customer to sweep up anything that he
or she may drop, and if this accident had
happened at a very busy
time when the shop was crowded with people I can well understand that
it would be difficult to say that
the defendants were negligent
because something had got on the floor which they may not have had
the opportunity of sweeping up.
Here, however, I think that there is
a burden thrown on the defendants either of explaining how this thing
got on the floor or
giving me far more evidence than they have as to
the state of the floor and the watch that was kept on it immediately
before the
accident. I do not mean that it was their duty to have
somebody going around watching it, but, in a store of this sort, into
which
people are invited to come, there is a duty on the shopkeeper
to see that his floors are kept reasonably safe.’
[31]
In our law however, the approach is different and in this matter, the
defendant accepts that
it owed the plaintiff a duty to keep the store
reasonably safe for use by the plaintiff and other members of the
public.
[32]
In
Checkers
Supermarket v Lindsay
[4]
the SCA set out what the applicable test is, namely:
‘
In our law
liability for negligence arises if it is foreseen that there is a
reasonable possibility of conduct causing harm to an
innocent third
party, and where there is an omission or failure to take reasonable
steps to guard against such occurrence. The
duty of a supermarket
owner/keeper to persons entering its supermarket at all times during
trading hours is aptly espoused by Stegmann
J as follows:
“
The duty on the
keeper of a supermarket to take reasonable steps is not so onerous as
to require that every spillage must be discovered
and cleaned up as
soon as it occurs. Nevertheless, it does require a system which will
ensure that spillages are not allowed to
create potential hazards for
any material length of time, and that they will be discovered, and
the floor made safe, with reasonable
promptitude.”.’
(Footnotes omitted.)
[33]
Similarly, Willis J in
Monteoli
v Woolworth (Pty) Ltd
[5]
concluded the following:
‘
It seems to me
that in the context of a supermarket or something similar, before the
presence of produce such as green beans on
the floor can give rise to
an inference of negligence, there must be some evidence of either a
direct or circumstantial nature
that the defendant, at the time of
the accident:
(i)
ought to have taken steps to prevent the presence of beans on the
floor from
occurring;
alternatively
,
(ii)
knew; or
(iii)
ought to have been aware of their presence; and
(iv)
failed to take reasonable steps to remove the offending items
forthwith.’
What
is meant by taking reasonable steps?
[34]
Ponnan JA in
Chartaprops
16 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Silberman
[6]
found that what is reasonable in the circumstances constitutes a
value judgment. The learned judge stated as follows in this regard:
‘
Chartaprops was
obliged to take no more than reasonable steps to guard against
foreseeable harm to the public. In this regard, it
is well to recall
the words of Scott JA in
Pretoria City Council v De Jager
:
“
Whether in any
particular case the steps actually taken are to be regarded as
reasonable or not depends upon a consideration of
all the facts and
circumstances of the case. It follows that merely because the harm
which was foreseeable did eventuate does not
mean that the steps
taken were necessarily unreasonable. Ultimately the inquiry involves
a value judgement.”.’ (Footnote
omitted.)
[35]
Interestingly, it is noteworthy that in
Chartaprops
[7]
the shopping mall had contracted the cleaning to a third party,
Advanced Cleaning which had a system in place for cleaning the
floors. Every part of the floor would ordinarily have been passed
over by one or other of the cleaners in its employ at intervals
of no
more than five minutes. The SCA emphasised that a system whereby a
spillage could be detected within five minutes was an
adequate system
provided the system was adhered to on the day in question.
[36]
Whether or not a cleaning system is sufficient depends on a number of
factors including the number
of staff allocated to deal with the
spillages, the floor area, the number of shopping aisles, the
question of the scope of duties
of cleaners and the heaviness of the
traffic, more susceptible or high risk areas.
[8]
In
Chartaprops
the court found that it was unreasonable for a spillage which
presented on a supermarket floor to be left for a period of half
an
hour and held that the shopping centre had failed to ensure the
spillage was timeously removed, being a period of up to forty
minutes
during which period the plaintiff had fallen.
[37]
I agree with the submissions of
Mr Veerasamy
that all the
plaintiff could testify to was the fall. There was also no evidence
that she slipped due to inattention save that
she acknowledged she
was eager to get to the queue in which her husband and children were.
The evidentiary burden now shifts to
the defendant to demonstrate it
has taken reasonable steps to prevent such harm.
[38]
Mr De Beer
who appeared for the defendant accepted that the
defendant owed the plaintiff and the public a duty to keep the store
reasonably
safe. He submitted that the plaintiff’s evidence was
inadequate specifically relating to establishing two elements of the
delictual action. He submitted there was no evidence presented by the
plaintiff regarding causation and the harm caused. The totality
of
her evidence can be summed up as follows: that she was present at the
defendant’s store, had fallen, and what she experienced
during
the fall.
[39]
During the course of cross-examination, it emanated that she had no
personal knowledge as to
how she fell, what caused her to fall, and
all the information she testified about concerning her fall was
conveyed to her by her
husband who was not called as a witness.
[40]
In addition, he submitted that the material contradictions in her
version between what she testified
to in court, what she pleaded in
her particulars of claim and mentioned in correspondence of 7 January
2016 and her letter of demand
of 15 May 2016 all relate to what
caused her to fall, events which transpired after her fall and the
alleged blackout that she
had experienced.
[41]
He submitted that what is self-evident from her evidence is that she
had testified that she traversed
the area on two occasions prior to
the fall. She and her family had passed the area whilst walking to
the till point. When she
arrived at the till point after realising
that she had forgotten to purchase chips she left the till point area
and walked past
the area on her way to the aisle whilst her family
remained in the queue at the till point. It was on her return from
the aisle
that she fell.
[42]
The plaintiff also acknowledged during the course of her evidence,
that she would have seen the
spillage on the floor during the first
two occasions but did not see anything nor did she observe any other
person slipping in
the area or anything to indicate that there was a
problem with that area. The time that elapsed from her moving from
the till point
to the aisle and back to the place where she had
fallen was indeed a very short time span and importantly she
acknowledged that
it was possible that the spillage could have
occurred during that relatively short time span.
[43]
The evidence of Dudhraj, the defendant’s store manager was also
not challenged by the plaintiff
concerning what systems were in place
at the time of the incident. Dudhraj’s evidence was not
disputed in any way specifically
that it was designed to detect
spillages within five minutes of occurring. I do not agree with
Mr
Veerasamy
that Mr Dudhraj did not testify as to what system was I
place on the day. Although he did testify that he did not witness the
incident
he was present shortly after the incident had occurred and
on his arrival found the cleaners cleaning the spillage.
[44]
His evidence concerning the fact that the defendant had appointed an
external cleaning company
to deal with the cleaning of the floor and
spillages was unchallenged. He indicated that the system implemented
worked and the
eight cleaners present on the floor during the
December period together with the 60 to 80 staff members were
designed to detect
any spillage within five minutes. The system he
indicated worked as he did not recall an incident of a patron having
slipped at
the defendant’s store with those mechanisms in
place. This evidence was unchallenged. What was also unchallenged was
his
evidence that the system in place was designed to detect
spillages within 5 minutes.
[45]
I accept that the plaintiff’s fall was caused by the presence
of a liquid on the floor
however, in my view the plaintiff has not
demonstrated that this was caused by the negligence of the defendant
which caused her
to suffer harm. I agree with the submissions of Mr
de Beer that it is most probable that when viewed in its totality,
the spillage
occurred during the time that the plaintiff had returned
to the shelves having walked past the till points and was returning
back
to the till point. It was a short period of time. I also accept
that as her husband and children were already in the queue she was
eager to get back to them.
[46]
What is noteworthy about the evidence of the defendant and the
undisputed evidence of its witness,
Dudhraj is that the defendant had
implemented a system to detect spillages, it was effective on the day
of the incident and the
defendant had appointed extra cleaning staff
during its busy seasons being Easter and Christmas.
[47]
In addition, the system implemented was reasonably safe and cannot be
called into question as
it is in keeping with the case authorities.
There is no evidence to suggest that the spillage had been left
unattended for an extended
period.
[48]
On the probabilities, the evidence establishes the following: The
system relied upon by the defendant
at the time involved 8 contracted
cleaners on duty together with 60 to 80 staff of the defendant
monitoring the floor. The defendant
employed an external contractor
to attend to the cleaning aspects of the business. The external
contractor assigned a supervisor
to go around and check. Management
and staff who would be present on the shop floor would also, on a
regular basis, check the floors
for spillages. During normal times,
the defendant would employ six cleaners on a floor, and during the
busier festive season, employ
two more cleaners. There were
approximately 120 to 150 employees present on duty for the day.
[49]
With the system being employed, a spillage could be detected within
five minutes. The store was
busy at the time, given it was the
Christmas period, and on the plaintiff's own evidence, a number of
people, including herself,
traversed the area where she fell. She had
traversed the area on 3 occasions, and on the third occasion, she
slipped, while no
one else had slipped in that area. The plaintiff
did not see the spillage nor was she aware of how she fell; all she
could testify
about was what occurred after her fall. The defendant's
system enabled them to detect spillages within 5 minutes. The
plaintiff
fell and was assisted immediately by her husband and staff
of the defendant. On Dudhraj's arrival, the spillage was being
cleaned
by his cleaning staff. The plaintiff's evidence was that she
had taken the same route on the two occasions prior to falling.
[50]
The plaintiff’s evidence is singularly unhelpful as she does
not indicate what she was
doing immediately before she fell –
all one knows is that the store was busy, she was surrounded by
shoppers and did not
see anything.
[51]
In my view the defendant has discharged its evidentiary burden to
show the system in place was
reasonably safe and would ensure
spillages were detected on the day in question in a relatively short
space of time.
[52]
Much was made by
Mr
Veerasamy
of the fact that the defendant did not lead evidence concerning the
contract, its terms, and whether there had been compliance
therewith.
Dudhraj’s evidence was to the effect that the contracts could
not be located given the passage of time. In addition,
I agree with
the submission of
Mr
De Beer
that the facts of this matter in relation to the contracts differ
from that which prevailed in
Avonmore
Supermarket CC v Venter
.
[9]
[53]
There is no indication that the contract was terminated due to
adverse conduct on the part of
the cleaning contractor and the only
evidence available is that of Dudhraj. In addition, he confirmed that
there were no incidents
that had occurred involving the cleaning
company which had been contracted whilst he had been employed at that
store.
[54]
Given the facts, when viewed in the light of the decisions in
Chartaprops
[10]
,
Lindsay
[11]
,
and
Williams
[12]
,
the defendant, in my view, has discharged the onus that it had a
reasonably safe and effective system in place on the day to prevent
harm. In my view regrettably, the plaintiff has not discharged the
onus of proving that the incident was caused as a consequence
of the
negligence of the defendant;
Costs
[55]
There is no reason to depart from the usual rule that the successful
party is entitled to its
costs and never was it suggested otherwise.
In addition, on 16 October 2023 the trial was adjourned to 28
November 2023 for closing
arguments with costs in the cause.
Order
[56]
In the result, the following order will issue:
1.
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.
HENRIQUES
ADJP
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff: I Veerasamy
Instructed
by:
Nompumelelo Hadebe Attorneys
12th Floor, Suite 1202,
Metropolitan Life Building,
391 Anton Lembede Street,
Durban
Tel No:031 304 3655
Email:
litigation@nhadebeattorneys.co.za
For
the defendant: W A De Beer
Instructed
by:
Walley & Van Der Lith Inc
Ref: Roland
Bottin/nh/A0054/1090
c/o Gavin Price Attorneys
199-201 Percy Osbourne
Road
Morningside, Durban
Email:
roland@wvl.co.za
Tel: 011 880 3473
Date
of Trial:
16 October 2023
Date
of Argument: 28 November 2023
Date
of Judgment: 14 June 2024
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, and released to SAFLII.
The
date and time for hand down is deemed to be 9h30 on 14 June 2024.
[1]
MTO
Forestry (Pty) Ltd v Swart N.O.
[2017] ZASCA 57
;
2017 (5) SA 76
(SCA) para 12.
[2]
Probst
v Pick’ n Pay Retailers
(Pty) Ltd
1998 (2) All SA 186
W.
[3]
Turner
v Arding & Hobbs Ltd
[1949] 2 All ER 911
(KB) at 912C.
[4]
Checkers
Supermarket v Lindsay
[2009]
ZASCA 26
; 2009 (4) 459 (SCA) para 5.
[5]
Monteoli
v Woolworth (Pty) Ltd
2000
(4) SA 735
(W) para 37.
[6]
Chartaprops
16 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Silberman
[2008]
ZASCA 170
;
2009 (11) SA 265
SCA para 48.
[7]
Ibid.
[8]
See
Stacey
v Supercare Services Group (Pty) Ltd
[2018] ZAWCHC 117
para 40; and
Checkers
Supermarket v Lindsay
fn 4.
[9]
Avonmore
Supermarket CC v Venter
[2014]
ZASCA 42; 2014 (5) SA 399 (SCA).
[10]
Chartaprops
16 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Silberman
fn 6.
[11]
Checkers
Supermarket v Lindsay
Fn 8.
[12]
Williams
v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd and another
[2023] ZAWCHC 229
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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